leonid-shevtsov / headless

Create a virtual X screen from Ruby, record videos and take screenshots.
http://leonid.shevtsov.me/en/headless
MIT License
967 stars 113 forks source link
ffmpeg integration-testing ruby screenshot selenium video-capture xvfb

Headless Travis CI status

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Headless is the Ruby interface for Xvfb. It allows you to create a headless display straight from Ruby code, hiding the low-level action. It can also capture images and video from the virtual framebuffer. For example, you can record screenshots and screencasts of your failing integration specs.

I created it so I can run Selenium tests in Cucumber without any shell scripting. Even more, you can go headless only when you run tests against Selenium. Other possible uses include pdf generation with wkhtmltopdf, or screenshotting.

Documentation is available at rubydoc.info

Changelog

Note: Headless will NOT hide most applications on OS X. Here is a detailed explanation

Installation

On Debian/Ubuntu:

sudo apt-get install xvfb
gem install headless

Usage

Block mode:

require 'rubygems'
require 'headless'
require 'selenium-webdriver'

Headless.ly do
  driver = Selenium::WebDriver.for :firefox
  driver.navigate.to 'http://google.com'
  puts driver.title
end

Object mode:

require 'rubygems'
require 'headless'
require 'selenium-webdriver'

headless = Headless.new
headless.start

driver = Selenium::WebDriver.for :firefox
driver.navigate.to 'http://google.com'
puts driver.title

headless.destroy

Cucumber

Running cucumber headless is now as simple as adding a before and after hook in features/support/env.rb:

# change the condition to fit your setup
if Capybara.current_driver == :selenium
  require 'headless'

  headless = Headless.new
  headless.start
end

Running tests in parallel

If you have multiple threads running acceptance tests in parallel, you want to spawn Headless before forking, and then reuse that instance with destroy_at_exit: false. You can even spawn a Headless instance in one ruby script, and then reuse the same instance in other scripts by specifying the same display number and reuse: true.

# spawn_headless.rb
Headless.new(display: 100, destroy_at_exit: false).start

# test_suite_that_could_be_ran_multiple_times.rb
Headless.new(display: 100, reuse: true, destroy_at_exit: false).start

# reap_headless.rb
headless = Headless.new(display: 100, reuse: true)
headless.destroy

# kill_headless_without_waiting.rb
headless = Headless.new
headless.destroy_without_sync

There's also a different approach that creates a new virtual display for every parallel test process - see this implementation by @rosskevin.

Cucumber with wkhtmltopdf

Note: this is true for other programs which may use headless at the same time as cucumber is running

When wkhtmltopdf is using Headless, and cucumber is invoking a block of code which uses a headless session, make sure to override the default display of cucumber to retain browser focus. Assuming wkhtmltopdf is using the default display of 99, make sure to set the display to a value != 99 in features/support/env.rb file. This may be the cause of Connection refused - connect(2) (Errno::ECONNREFUSED).

headless = Headless.new(:display => '100')
headless.start

Capturing video

Video is captured using ffmpeg. You can install it on Debian/Ubuntu via sudo apt-get install ffmpeg or on OS X via brew install ffmpeg. You can capture video continuously or capture scenarios separately. Here is typical use case:

require 'headless'

headless = Headless.new
headless.start

Before do
  headless.video.start_capture
end

After do |scenario|
  if scenario.failed?
    headless.video.stop_and_save("/tmp/#{BUILD_ID}/#{scenario.name.split.join("_")}.mov")
  else
    headless.video.stop_and_discard
  end
end

Video options

When initiating Headless you may pass a hash with video options.

headless = Headless.new(:video => { :frame_rate => 12, :codec => 'libx264' })

Available options:

Taking screenshots

Call headless.take_screenshot to take a screenshot. It needs two arguments:

Screenshots can be taken by either using import (part of imagemagick library) or xwd utility.

import captures a screenshot and saves it in the format of the specified file. It is convenient but not too fast as it has to do the encoding synchronously.

xwd will capture a screenshot very fast and store it in its own format, which can then be converted to one of other picture formats using, for example, netpbm utilities - xwdtopnm <xwd_file> | pnmtopng > capture.png.

To install the necessary libraries on ubuntu:

import - run sudo apt-get install imagemagick xwd - run sudo apt-get install X11-apps and if you are going to use netpbm utilities for image conversion - sudo apt-get install netpbm

Troubleshooting

/tmp/.X11-unix is missing

Xvfb requires this directory to exist. It cannot be created automatically, because the directory must be owned by the root user. (You will never get this error if running as root - for example, in a Docker container.)

On macOS, the directory will be created when you run XQuartz.app. But since /tmp is cleared on reboot, you will need to open XQuartz.app after a reboot before running Xvfb. (You don't need to leave it running.)

To create this directory manually, on either macOS or Linux:

mkdir /tmp/.X11-unix
sudo chmod 1777 /tmp/.X11-unix
sudo chown root /tmp/.X11-unix/

Note that you may need to run these commands after every reboot, too.

Display socket is taken but lock file is missing

This means that there is an X server that is taking up the chosen display number, but its lock file is missing. This is an exceptional situation. Please stop the server process manually (pkill Xvfb) and open an issue.

Video not recording

If video is not recording, and there are no visible exceptions, try passing the following option to Headless to figure out the reason: Headless.new(video: {log_file_path: STDERR}). In particular, there are some issues with the version of avconv packaged with Ubuntu 12.04 - an outdated release, but still in use on Travis.

Contributors


© 2011-2015 Leonid Shevtsov, released under the MIT license